Change to Labour hire workers release frequency
Labour hire workers has now transitioned to an annual release frequency (with quarterly data).
This release brings together updated data from the following ABS sources:
- Labour Account, December quarter 2024
- Jobs in Australia, 2021-22
- Characteristics of Employment, August 2024
Changes to the Characteristics of Employment survey
The ABS has made changes to the multi-topic Characteristics of Employment survey. Specifically, the Labour Hire module of questions has been updated to focus on the most useful information on that topic. This is reflected in changes to Table 3, with information about labour hire firm or employment agency registration no longer available. Previously published data are still available in the table.
Labour hire workers and the Labour supply service industry
Labour hire work is characterised by a third-party arrangement, where there is:
- an employment relationship between an individual employee and a labour hire firm, and
- a commercial arrangement between the labour hire firm and another business for the supply of the individual employee's labour, for a fee.
The labour hire firm then pays the individual employee (the labour hire worker) their wage or salary. Labour hire workers are employees of a labour hire firm, rather than the firm that they are providing their labour to.
The multi-party nature of labour hire work makes it one of the more challenging arrangements to produce statistics on, compared with the more common employer-employee relationships and self-employment.
Businesses that provide labour hire services, and their employees, are classified to the ANZSIC 4-digit industry class of 'Labour supply services' (ANZSIC 7212). Labour within businesses in this industry is different to most businesses, given the main activity is the provision of labour as a service to other businesses, rather than the use of labour within the business to produce goods and/or services.